This invention relates to a torque limiter wrench and a method of applying a limited torque and of controlling a pawl on a ratchet.
The prior art is already aware of wrenches for limiting torque. Also it is aware of ratchet and pawl arrangements for ratcheting in both directions of rotation in the application of rotation to a workpiece. Still further, the prior art is aware of handles and jaws pivotally connected together for the pivoting the handle relative to the jaw upon the application of a certain magnitude of torque, to thereby limit the application of the torque.
The present invention improves upon the prior art by having the handle pivot to a return alignment with the jaw after the application of the limited torque and after the consequent pivoting of the handle relative to the jaw, and to do so with only a minimal amount of torque for that return. That minimal amount is much less than the torque limit as applied to the workpiece.
Still further, there is a longitudinal axis for the wrench, and there is a ratchet and pawl combination wherein the pawl receives a tooth-engaging force at a location offset from the longitudinal axis, and a pusher forces on the pawl at the offset location for maximum engagement of the pawl onto the ratchet.
Also, this includes inventive methods for accomplishing the foregoing.
The angular degrees of pivot in
The unshown workpiece would be engaged by the wrench at the ratchet 17 which can be either a one-way or a two-way ratchet, and a two-way is shown. Thus the ratchet 17 is shown with a hexagonally shaped hollow for receiving the unshown workpiece for rotating same.
So the wrench extends along a longitudinal axis A in the aligned mode shown in
The pivot connection between the handle 10 and the jaw 11 is that pivot pin 12. Also centered on the pin 12 and rotatable thereon is an annular cam 18 with twelve radially extending lobes 19. Thus the cam has thirty-degree intervals of lobes and twelve intervening depressions 21, as seen in
A ratchet 27 is also mounted on the pin 12 and is rotatable thereabout.
A compression spring 31 yieldingly forces on the plunger at the plunger collar 32 to urge the follower 26 into snug connect with the cam 18, as shown in
That means that the handle 10 and jaw 11 are aligned and transmit torque therebetween through the cam 18 and the ratchet 27 and the pawl 32 which is pivotal on a pin 36 on the jaw. That torquing continues until the force of the spring 31 on the plunger and the follower lock 26 is overcome by the rotational force on the handle 10, namely to the limit torque.
The limit torque can be adjusted by adjusting the compression spring 31 via the slidable sleeve 37 axially positioned by the split threaded cylindrical adjuster 38 and lock plug 39 inside the cylinder 38 for holding the cylinder 38 in axial abutment against the sleeve 37 by means of the lock plug expanding the cylinder 38 into threaded contact with the threaded interior of the hollow handle and its threads at 41. A cap 42 covers the handle end and it can be removed for access to the adjuster 38 for adjusting the force the spring 31 can apply to the follower 26 and thus adjust the torque limit. The plunger collar 32 abuts a sleeve 43 threaded into the grip 45 to hold the plunger 24 in leftward axial position and have the spring 31 effective on the plunger in the leftward direction as seen in
When the torque exceeds its limit, the follower 26 rides over the cam lobe 18 to the next valley 22, the lower one as seen in
Next, the cam 18 and ratchet 27 are free to rotate counterclockwise, as seen in
It is important to understand that the torque required to return the handle into its aligned mode is much less than the limit torque which pivoted the handle out of its aligned mode. So the workpiece is not loosened in the return, and only that little torque effort is required in the delicate environment of surgery. The ratchet 27 and pawl 32 are thus only one-way effective in resisting rotation, and they permit the easy rotational return of the cam and the ratchet 27 while the lock 26 in the cam valley 22 engages the cam for that return rotation.
The workpiece-engaging end of the wrench can have either a one-way or a two-way ratchet. The drawings show a two-way, and
The pawl also has a projection 61 disposed on a plane intermediate the two sets of teeth 56 and 57 and through the pawl pivot 54. When the pawl is engaged, the projection 61 is located offset from the axis A and is on a line B extending through the center of the ratchet and through the tooth engagement location, as shown in
A pusher 62 is axially movably mounted on the jaw and is spring-urged by a compression spring 63 toward the pawl. There is a cylindrical opening 64 in the jaw 11 for slidable reception of a plunger 66 on the jaw, and the pusher 62 is contained by the plunger 66 to be urged toward the pawl 53.
The pusher 62 has a flat planar face 67 in sliding contact with the projection 61 such that the projection can slide along the face 67 between the pawl positions of
Another way of appreciating the novelty is to observe that the location of the contact between the pusher and projection is offset from axis A and on a line parallel to axis A and away from the axis beyond the location of the engagement of the tooth contact between the ratchet and the pawl. So the contact is substantially offset from the axis A.
The foregoing describes a preferred embodiment as required for this disclosure. One skilled in the art that changes can be made in the embodiment, and thusly the scope of the invention should be determined by the appended claims. The method is also described in the foregoing, inherently and directly, and is included as a part of this invention.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3893354 | Knoll | Jul 1975 | A |
4019412 | Kraus et al. | Apr 1977 | A |
5337638 | Coss et al. | Aug 1994 | A |
5557994 | Nakayama | Sep 1996 | A |
6742418 | Amami | Jun 2004 | B2 |
20070039432 | Cutler | Feb 2007 | A1 |